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Holidaymakers who stayed at the resort where Madeleine McCann disappeared are
being asked to provide DNA samples and fingerprints after detectives found
evidence of a possible kidnapper, The Times can reveal.
A letter from the head of the British investigation says that Portuguese
detectives have been unable to identify a number of samples recovered at the
Ocean Club in Praia da Luz.
Police across Britain
are now interviewing former guests in the biggest operation since the search
for Madeleine was abandoned three weeks after her disappearance in May.
The move came as Paulo Rebelo, one of Portugal’s most senior detectives,
was put in charge of the case and as officers were reported to have undertaken
a new search of the McCanns’ two-bedroom apartment and the beach near by.
The Times has learnt that detectives recovered unidentified DNA and
fingerprints during a series of earlier searches. They have also been unable to
trace a number of mobile telephone calls made on the evening that Madeleine was
reported missing, six days before her fourth birthday.
The operation — which comes a month after Kate and Gerry McCann were named as
suspects over the disappearance of their daughter — suggests that detectives
cannot rule out the possibility that a stranger might have stolen the child
from her bed.
Leicestershire Constabulary, which is co-ordinating the investigation in Britain,
was officially asked by the Portuguese authorities last month to help. In a
letter obtained by The Times, Detective Superintendent Stuart Prior tells the
tourists: “I have now been asked by the Portuguese investigation team to
arrange for DNA samples and fingerprints to be taken from holidaymakers living
in the UK
who were staying at the Ocean Club Resort.”
He wrote that the DNA and fingerprints “will help the Portuguese police to
eliminate samples they have taken and not yet been able to identify”. The
tourists are also being asked about the use of their mobile phones and for
details of their movements and clothing the evening that Madeleine
disappeared.The DNA samples will be analysed by the Forensic Science Service in
Birmingham,
which has carried out tests on material recovered from Ocean Club flats and
several vehicles, including the McCanns’ hire car.
Mr Prior’s letter says that the operation was routine practice and that the DNA
samples would not be added to any national database in Britain.
One of the tourists already interviewed by police said that British officers
had criticised the decision to wait so long to mount such an operation. “They
said that they would aim to do this kind of work within 48 hours of a
disappearance and could not comprehend why it has taken five months. We
struggled to remember the kind of detail that they wanted about our movements
on specific days and what we were wearing.”
The questioning of the British tourists was requested last month by Luis Bilro
Verao, the prosecutor overseeing the case, after a judge ruled that there was
insufficient evidence for him to order the McCanns to return to the Algarve
for further questioning.
Clarence Mitchell, the McCanns’ spokesman, said he hoped that Mr Rebelo’s first
priority as head of the investigation would be to eliminate the couple from the
inquiry and refocus efforts on finding Madeleine.
The new man in charge
— Paulo Rebelo, an assistant national director of the PolÍcia Judicaria (PJ),
has been appointed as the head of the Madeleine McCann investigation
— Officially his new role is the chief of the PJ criminal investigation
department based in Portiamo, which covers Praia da Luz
— Rebelo made his career at the Central Directory for the Investigation of Drug
Trafficking before being appointed one of four associate directors last year
— He was head of the criminal investigation department in Lisbon which
uncovered the notorious “Casa Pia” paedophile ring in 2002
— Other high profile cases include the “Mea-Culpa” investigation into the death
of 13 people in an arson attack. He headed the “Freeport case” in which a PJ officer was
convicted of leaking details of a corruption investigation on the eve of the
last parliamentary elections
— Rebelo is said to be highly regarded. Colleagues say he is nice and a good
communicator
— He is close to the PJ’s national director, AlÍpio Ribeiro, who demoted the
the previous head of the inquiry, Gonçalo Amaral, last week
— Mr Rebelo will have to find a new deputy as Tavares Almeida has applied for unpaid
leave and says he wants to leave the investigation
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